tonyfast is an accessibility and disability advocate with expertise in open-source design, development, and science. they are passionate about advocating for equitable computational literature and digital accessibility for disabled scientists.
- nbconvert-a11y accessible reference implementations for jupyter computational notebooks.
- writing experiments with literate programs and computational essays on my blog.
- a custom accessible documentation system based on dataframes
- pidgy,- midgy, and- importnbliterate computing tools.
- notebooks for all collaboration with Space Telescope Science Institute improving the accessibility of static notebooks through collaboration with designers and compensated disabled testers
- materialsgenomefoundation strategic planning lead for an open materials science economy
- project jupyter accessibility working group, jupyter triage, and jupyter community calls
➕ more
- writers workshop
- quirkshops
- open source directions
- jupyter accessibility workshops part 1 part 2
- alt text events
- atlanta jupyter user group
- pydata atlanta
- deathbeds blog
- jupyter day triangle
- jupyter days atlanta 2016 2018
- ten pounds of 💩
- reincarnation of the notebook
- calligrams
- powers often
- ten things 'bout jupyter
- notebookism
- the materials data scientist
- Materials Genome Foundation
- distinguished project jupyter contributor
- Quansight, LLC
- PyData Atlanta
- Bastille Networks
- Anaconda Inc
- Georgia Tech
- University of California Santa Barbara
❓ about this repository
this repository is one of github's special repositories for my personal profile. i wanted to do more with than just a readme so i'm using it as a place to package my computational essays or literate programs as a python distribution.
currently this project features:
- 
blogs, essays, notebooks and markdown re-used as python source code 
- 
a python project called tonyfastthat useshatchfor most development tasks (seepyproject.toml)pip install -e. # for development mode
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github actions to deploy my content on github pages. the documentation is made of: -  mkdocsdocumentation with my own notebook customizations. (seemkdocs.yml)
-  a no-install, in-the-browser jupyterlitedemo so myself and others can try out the code themselves
 
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some things i'd like to do: - add cron for some posts
- add tests for some posts
-  build a solid binder to run heavier demos that might not work in jupyterlite